Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

  We've scoured the web to present you with a fine and varied selection of free fonts. Including scripts, serifs, and a range of ligatures, these fonts will give you greater flexibility in your designs, and add to your arsenal of design tools.

Some of these free fonts can be used on your web projects, but check the terms. And if you're looking at a quick primer on using web fonts, we explain all here.

So, without further ado, join us as we present you with 10 of the best free fonts, which you can download and use today. Let us know how you get on!

01. Dense

dense(1).jpg

 

Dense currently only comes in Regular but there'll be more weights to follow.

One of our favourite free fonts to recently surface, Dense is a versatile, elegant, geometric and compact sans-serif typeface. Three weights have been created thus far: thin, regular and bold. Created by by Canadian artist Charles Daoud, Regular is currently the only weight available, but Daoud has said that he'll update his Behance page with news on how to get the other weights in the near future.

FORMAT: TTF

 

02. Chrome Light

chrome1(1).jpg

Chrome Light can be used for any type of personal work

 

Created by London-based graphic designer Artem Sukhinin, Chrome light is available in two variations, Chrome and Chrome Black, with a full set of letters, numbers and four punctuation marks. This is one of those free fonts that can be used for any type of graphic design - print, web, packaging and more.

FORMAT: TTF

 

03. Higher

higher(1).jpg

 Higher comes in both TTF and OTF formats

 

Created by Portugal-based graphic designer Marissa Passos, free font Higher was made as a student project during her time at the University of Porto. The typeface contains a full set of uppercase characters and numbers 0-9. It's free for both personal and commercial use, and available in OTF and TTF formats.

Format: OTF and TTF

 

04. Look Up

hellofont(1)(1).jpg

Filiz Sahin creates another brilliant free font

New York based interactive designer and illustrator Filiz Sahin is quickly becoming known for her free fonts. Often experimenting with an array of different techniques, her fonts are as versatile as her own design style. Look Up is one of the most playful free fonts on our list, with a home-made feel, with little arrows at the edge of each letter.

Format: TTF

 

05. Woodwarrior

woodwarrior(1).jpg

Woodwarrior is a typeface inspired by the north, and the contrast between modern man made structures and untouched nature shaped by wind and ice alone. Created by designer Anton Bohlin, Woodwarrior is one of those free fonts that's perfect for experimental headlines and eye-catching straps.

Format: TTF

 

06. Fenix

fenix.jpg

 

Graphic designer Fernando Diaz describes this entry to our free fonts as a "serif typeface designed for display and long texts, its foundations are based in calligraphy, with strong serifs and rough strokes. Its proportions seek to gain space in height and width. Fénix is elegant at large sizes and legible at the same time, with a lot of rhythm in small sizes."

FORMAT: OTF

 

07. Woodshop

woodshop.jpg

Earlier this year, Pennsylvania-based graphic designer Nick Slater released this Woodshop typeface, which he generously offers as a free download. The slab font comes complete with a full set of upper and lowercase letters, numbers and special characters.

FORMAT: OTF

 

08. Quirky nots

quirky(1).jpg

Toronto based typographer Amit Jakhu created this fun and playfully unique typeface for his Typography 6 class. He released it as one of the hundreds of free fonts out there, because he wouldn't have further developed it after finishing college - and we couldn't thank him enough!

It was a huge learning curve for Jakhu and we think he's done a great job for a first timer. He's happy for you to modify it, share it and basically do whatever you want with it. It is fully available to use anywhere; no restrictions!

FORMAT: TTF

 

09. Vincent

vincent.jpg

Vincent was developed by graphic and product designer for NBC Universal Ben Suarez. Created at the end of last year, this vintage-inspired design was Suarez's first fully functioning typeface, and is a great addition to our free fonts.

"Vincent was intended to be used as a title font," explains Suarez. It was "named after my grandfather who drove a '76 Chrysler Cordoba and smoked out of an old wooden pipe. He was rad."

FORMAT: TTF

 

10. BoB

bob(1).jpg

Inspired by the playful asethics of illustration, Burma-based typographer Zarni has created this cool and characterful font. This kind of typography is perfect for experimentation and will work wonders on posters and headlines.

Coming in capital and lower case letters, BoB also includes numerical symbols as well as a variety of punctuation marks. As free fonts go it has plenty of uses - just be sure to show Zarni some love.

FORMAT: TTF

Edited by ikbelkirasan
Posted

Nice fonts, I will download most of them, thanks for sharing.

 

p.s.: You posted at the wrong section, you should post this at the resources/tools section.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Posts

    • NEW SEASON GRAND OPENING FROM - 23 JANUARY 2026, FRIDAY, 20:00 +2 GMT !
    • Ehh so you just judge on if product is free or paid? Wtf. You know that a price tag oftens value the quality of a product. So how you think that a free fork is superior to one that's been maintained for years and is paid?
    • Sadly we gotta choose between poop and shit, it is what it is.
    • GM, change server name to L2][Wipe please.
    • I have browsed this forum for months, witnessing the infinite and endless debate over which datapack is better, whether one is leaked or another is stolen. I constantly see developers from different projects throwing mud at each other for their own convenience. For a novice 27-year-old developer with a dream, all of this is disheartening. Opening a Lineage 2 server in 2026 seems like a titanic goal when looking for stability and scalability. The thought of depositing my only savings into one of these datapacks, praying to God that everything goes well, is terrifying. This is not a destructive critique of any forum member or developer. It is simply a call for reflection: What are we doing for the original essence of Lineage 2? Have we forgotten those memories from when we were young, going to a cybercafé to play for 12 hours straight just to grind a few levels? It seems that instead of providing a quality server to the community—a place where our inner child can enjoy the game—this has become a race where the only prize is money, at the cost of progressively destroying the game's community. Is there actually anyone or any project thinking about this? I know that invested time requires financial return; obviously, we all need to survive and eat. But friends... that isn't everything. Currently, in Argentina, 100% of the servers are garbage and last approximately one month. Corrupt admins, illegal item sales for quick profit, and endless toxic practices. Since I couldn't find the answers I needed, I tasked a generic AI (Google Gemini) with creating an extensive report on datapacks, history, competition, and current objectives. I am leaving it here for anyone who wants to read it. Comprehensive Research Report: The State of the Lineage 2 Java (L2J) Emulation Ecosystem 2020-2026 1. Executive Summary and Strategic Scope The landscape of Java-based Lineage 2 (L2J) server emulation has undergone a radical metamorphosis between 2020 and 2026. What began in the early 2000s as a scattered community effort to reverse-engineer a Korean MMORPG has consolidated by 2026 into a highly sophisticated software development sector. This report aims to provide the definitive guide and the most comprehensive technical analysis available in the market regarding the selection, architecture, and viability of L2J datapacks. A clear bifurcation in development philosophy has been identified: on one side, massive, chronicle-agnostic open-source projects, indisputably led by L2JMobius (and its strategic transition to the MIT license in 2025); and on the other, highly specialized niche projects like aCis (for Interlude) and L2JEternity (for High Five), which prioritize architectural purity and extreme performance through the early adoption of JDK 25. This document not only evaluates "completeness" in terms of game content but also dissects technical debt, legal security, and long-term sustainability. 1.1 Evaluation Methodology To determine the "best" datapack, we applied a multidimensional evaluation matrix: Architectural Integrity: Analysis of code quality, thread management, and modern design patterns. Lifecycle Maturity: Update frequency and leadership stability. Tool Ecosystem: Availability of client editors, geodata generators, and compatible anti-bot systems. Commercial Viability: Ability to sustain a stable economy and support high concurrency loads (500+ simultaneous players). 2. The Technological Revolution: From Java 8 to Java 25 (2020-2026) One of the most critical findings is the quantum leap in the underlying infrastructure. The 2023-2026 period has witnessed a technological arms race. 2.1 The Impact of JDK 25 on Emulation Vanguard projects like L2JEternity and the main branches of L2JMobius completed the migration to JDK 25. Garbage Collection (GC): The implementation of ZGC and Shenandoah has solved the historic problem of "GC pauses" (lag due to memory cleaning). With JDK 25, these pauses are sub-millisecond, allowing for fluid massive combat (Sieges). Virtual Threads (Project Loom): This allows handling thousands of simultaneous connections and AI tasks without the excessive cost of traditional OS threads. 2.2 Network Layer Modernization (Netty) The old MMOcore-based architecture has been replaced or heavily refactored using Netty, optimizing the packet pipeline and improving security against application-layer DDoS attacks. 2.3 Tech Stack Comparison | Project | Java Version (2025/26) | Database | Status | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | L2JMobius | JDK 21 / 25 | MySQL / MariaDB | Active (MIT) | | L2JEternity| JDK 25 | MySQL | Active (Private) | | aCis | JDK 11 / 17 | MySQL | Active (Private) | | L2JFrozen/Brasil | JDK 7 / 8 | MySQL | Obsolete / Risk | 3. L2JMobius: The Open Source Hegemon L2JMobius emerges as the definitive answer for the vast majority of use cases in 2026, based on three pillars: universality, legality, and tools. Universality: It maintains a unified architecture (monorepo) supporting everything from C1 to the most recent Essence versions. Core fixes propagate to all versions. MIT License (June 2025): A historic milestone allowing servers to modify code extensively and keep changes private without violating the license, legitimizing commercial use. Vertical Integration (L2ClientDat): The team actively maintains client editing tools, ensuring perfect compatibility with the latest protocols (e.g., Protocol 507). 4. The Battle for Interlude: Purism vs. Modernity Interlude (C6) remains the most demanded version. aCis (The Gold Standard): Obsessed with code quality and "Retail" fidelity. Ideal for Low Rate servers (x1-x10). The free version is often stale; the paid version is the professional choice. L2JMobius Interlude: The practical "batteries included" alternative. Includes popular mods out of the box and benefits from the modern core. Ideal for Mid/High Rate PvP servers. Warning: L2JFrozen and L2JBrasil are considered obsolete and dangerous in 2026 due to security vulnerabilities and unmaintainable code. 5. The High Five Sector: Commercialization and Risks L2J Sunrise: Positions itself as a "turnkey" solution, but its closed code creates total vendor dependence. Risky for long-term projects. L2JEternity: The technical gem for advanced admins. Pioneer in JDK 25 and offers native support for protections like Strix and SmartGuard. 6. Essence and the Modern Era For Essence, L2JMobius has no real competition in the free Java space, reacting to NCSoft updates with supernatural speed. Russian commercial alternatives (L2-Scripts) exist but come with high costs. 7. Ecosystem and Auxiliary Tools Geodata: Essential to avoid movement errors. 2026 hybrid engines reduce "wall-shooting." Vote Reward: Middleware systems like VDSystem or iTopZ are mandatory, and modern datapacks already include the necessary hooks. 8. Conclusions and Definitive Recommendations After analyzing repositories and trends up to January 2026: Overall Winner: L2JMobius. Best ratio of features/modernity/support. Purist's Choice (Interlude): aCis. Unbeatable mechanical fidelity. Performance Option (High Five): L2JEternity. Extreme optimization. Final Warning: Strictly avoid L2JFrozen, L2JBrasil, and black-box projects like Sunrise for critical infrastructures.
  • Topics

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

This community uses essential cookies to function properly. Non-essential cookies and third-party services are used only with your consent. Read our Privacy Policy and We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue..

AdBlock Extension Detected!

Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our members.

Please disable AdBlock browser extension first, to be able to use our community.

I've Disabled AdBlock